Neutron is neutral.
Proton is positive.
Electron is negative.
No, carbon is not a subatomic particle. Carbon is an element, specifically a chemical element with the symbol "C" and atomic number 6, meaning it has 6 protons in its nucleus. Subatomic particles are particles that are smaller than atoms, such as protons, neutrons, and electrons.
It is a property, like mass. Not a particle. The electron and proton charges are considered to be the reference charges (-e and +e).
It would look very small because subatomic particles are small.
particle whose dimensions is less then that of atom are said to be subatomic particle . they may be charged or uncharged .eg neutron is uncharged subatomic particle where as electron ,proton , positron are charged subatomic particle.
since electrons are negative and protons are posotive, the subatomic particles attract because of the opposite charges
Subatomic particles with no charges are neutrons
proton +1neutron 0electron -1
"All subatomic particles have the same mass" is not a true statement, as different subatomic particles, such as protons, neutrons, and electrons, have different masses and charges.
Such particles include Electron and betatron (beta particle)
They help atoms bond together
Three Subatomic Particles: 1) Neutrons- neutral (no) charge. 2) Protons- positive charge (+) . 3) Electrons- negative charge (-) .
In the atom these particles are the electrons.
Neutrons: 0Protons: +1
Neutron - 0CProton - +1.6x10-19CElectron - -1.6x10-19C
proton +1neutron 0electron -1
No, carbon is not a subatomic particle. Carbon is an element, specifically a chemical element with the symbol "C" and atomic number 6, meaning it has 6 protons in its nucleus. Subatomic particles are particles that are smaller than atoms, such as protons, neutrons, and electrons.
Neutrons are stable subatomic particles and do not decay or change into other particles under normal conditions. However, electrons do not undergo nuclear decay but can change in energy levels within an atom.